Tag Archives: New England

If you follow me on Twitter (if you’re not, why the hell aren’t you? For shame!), you are probably aware that I’m temporarily moving my man-shopping operation to the USA for the next month. I’m using this trip as an opportunity to add an international comparative angle to my current “anthropological research” in Paris.

My great American come-back tour begins in Boston and Cambridge, where I lived for five years before fleeing the country altogether. So in a way, I was coming home.

When I touched down at Logan airport, my heart was racing with excitement.

I WAS IN AMERICA!

It felt strange.

Signs were in English.

The guy at the Amex exchange desk told me to “Have a nice day” and smiled at me. He was so nice that I wanted to leap over the counter and give him a hug.

And when I went to a posh sports club to attempt to scam my way into a free trial membership, the man-situation got even better.

Or so I thought.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

When I arrived at the gym, the receptionist directed me to membership services and told me to ask for Blair, who would see to all my membership needs. But when I rolled up, a handsome and earnest young man (NOT Blair), hereafter dubbed Mr. New England, insisted on “taking care of me.”

And I thought, “Hubba hubba. I hope that you DO take good care of me, you yummy thing.”

Mr. New England truly was the poster-boy for that all-American, Abercrombie, Greenwich-Connecticut, crew-team hunksicle.

And while that isn’t normally the type of guy that I normally go for, my expat existence is such that it’s been a long time since I encountered such a specimen.

It was so very convenient that I was able to find such a representative American man-product within days of my arrival in New England!

But I digress.

So back to my story… Mr. New England showed me into his office and proceeded to give me the standard sales pitch. No surprise there.

But at some point — I’m not sure when — I realized that I was trying to flirt with this man.

Problem: I am a crap flirter.

When I fancy a guy, I get very nervous.

When I get nervous, my conversational skills tend to resemble verbal spewage instead of verbal sparring.

While in nervous mode, my brain devotes 99% of its computing power to essential tasks like remaining upright, avoiding moving obstacles, and preventing saliva from dribbling down my shirt. The 1% that remains is insufficient for complicated operations like, for instance, sounding or acting even remotely intelligent.

If I were to write a step-by-step guide to flirting based solely on my interactions with Mr. New England, it would go something like this:

Spew at least five minutes worth of nonsense every time he asks you a basic question.

When he escorts you out of his office to take you on a tour of the gym facilities, forget to take your wallet and keys with you.

While on the tour, if he says anything remotely flirtatious or provocative to you, emit a shrill, nervous sound that serves as your lame attempt at charming giggling.

Say, “That is SO COOL,” to everything that he says. Because clearly, that shows off your high IQ and brilliant conversational skills.

Upon returning to his office after the tour, when he points out that you’d forgotten your wallet and keys there, emit that same shrill nervous sound again.

She looks like she knows what she's doing. I look nothing like this.

Be sure to ask him heaps of stupid questions that he already answered before the tour.

When leaving his office for the final time, inadvertently drop your metro card on the floor somewhere.

When he runs after you to return it, stare blankly at it as if you’ve never seen it before. Then say, “ooooooooooooohhhhhhhhhhhh. Thank you, how did it escape my wallet?” and spout lame excuses about jet lag.

Run away.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Right.

So obviously, I’m no casanova.

And it would come as no surprise that just before I executed Step #9, Mr. New England told me that he had a girlfriend.

But what I can’t fathom is why, after telling me about his girlfriend, he asked for my number anyway.

In any case, I still ran away.

And no, I didn’t give him my number.

Next!

And tomorrow I leave for upstate New York, so more stories to come…

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About me

I'm a twenty-something American woman who tried to make sense of dating and romance in Paris -- or the lack thereof. The Frenchmen were products on the shelf, and I was a shopaholic. But the social experiment continues in D.C., now that I'm back in the USA and on the prowl for new (American) toys to play with!